I don't even remember what the post was about or what scenario you're referring to so I don't know how it's supposed to help either.

I was bored so I went back to look it up for you guys.
Someone said something about how VPNs aren't entirely anonymous since it will log the IP the VPN uses. Then someone said to daisy chain it to get around that. Then someone asked him to explain that. Then you used the LMGTFY on him.

I think the whole idea might be to VPN into a VPN into a VPN.... and then your IP might sort of kind of be masked by all that VPNing.

I was bored so I went back to look it up for you guys.
Someone said something about how VPNs aren't entirely anonymous since it will log the IP the VPN uses. Then someone said to daisy chain it to get around that. Then someone asked him to explain that. Then you used the LMGTFY on him.

I think the whole idea might be to VPN into a VPN into a VPN.... and then your IP might sort of kind of be masked by all that VPNing.

Bahahaha, thanks and repped! So I don't get why he called me a Twit and says he knows what daisy chain is, if he asked about it in the first place.

But yeah, the concept of daisy chains is basically a VPN into a VPN, kind of like Inception (dream within a dream).

However, for the truly paranoid, you're still only safe if all of the VPNs you use don't track. But if you take this statement to be true, then you'd probably be good with just 1 VPN in the first place lol.

now your browsers/apps use your regular connection and utorrent uses the VPN

SIDE NOTE: when doing this method you are just using another IP to send data through and not actually encrypting it, so you would also want to select the "encrypt data" option in utorrent as well. (this is what i have gathered form the forums)

this is also secure in the sense that, if the proxy has issues, utorrent will disconnect, vs if you use the client and the vpn drops, utorrent may still run. though people have fixes for that as well. (setting VPN and a public network, and your internet as private, then allowing utorrent to only run on the public network)

also, some people are extra secure and run utorrent with the proxy settings while also using the VPN.

now your browsers/apps use your regular connection and utorrent uses the VPN

SIDE NOTE: when doing this method you are just using another IP to send data through and not actually encrypting it, so you would also want to select the "encrypt data" option in utorrent as well. (this is what i have gathered form the forums)

this is also secure in the sense that, if the proxy has issues, utorrent will disconnect, vs if you use the client and the vpn drops, utorrent may still run. though people have fixes for that as well. (setting VPN and a public network, and your internet as private, then allowing utorrent to only run on the public network)

also, some people are extra secure and run utorrent with the proxy settings while also using the VPN.